Title: Interplay between Genes and Environment
 1Interplay between Genes and Environment 
 2Gene Expression
- Evolved to be responsive to intracellular and 
 extracellular environments
- Biological index of environmental influence 
- Phenotype model 
- Assess environmental influence by its change in 
 gene expression profiles across genome
3Caveats
- Know a lot more about genes than environment 
- E.g., from base pairs, on chromosomes, 
 transcription, etc.
- Questions 
- Where are environmental effects expressed in 
 brain?
- How do environmental effects change with 
 development?
- How does environment cause individual differences 
 in behaviour?
- Etc., etc., etc.
4Environment
- Gosh, its important 
- Demonstration through quantitative genetics 
- Heritability rarely more than 50 
- Hence, environmental effects typically going to 
 account for over 50 of individual differences
- Three rather important discoveries
5Nonshared Environment
- Environmental influences make children in same 
 family no more similar than children in other
 families
- Rather a surprise for traditional psychology 
 theories
6Genotype-Environment Correlation
- People create their own experiences, partially 
 for genetic reasons
- Nature of nurture
7Genotype-Environment Interaction
- Effect of environment can depend on genetics 
- And, effects of genetics can depend on the 
 environment.
- Genetic sensitivity to environments
8Environment
- Shared environment 
- Family resemblance not explained by genetics 
- Nonshared (unique) environment 
- Variance not explained by heredity or shared 
 environment
- Includes error of measurement 
- Note shared  nonshared not limited to family 
 environments
- Experience outside family can be shared or 
 nonshared by siblings
9Testing for Shared Environment
- Direct test 
- Resemblance among adoptive relatives 
- Zero heredity
10Testing for Nonshared Environment
- Direct test 
- Identical twins 
- Same genetics 
- Generally share same environment 
- So, difference due to nonshared 
- But, a conservative estimate 
- Twins often share special environments that 
 non-twin sibs dont
- Need to account for this when calculating 
 nonshared effect
11Specific Nonshared Environment
- Assess elements of environment specific to each 
 child
- Not aspects shared by all siblings 
- What specific factors make children in same 
 family so different?
- Remember factors specific to a child can also be 
 shared by other child(ren) in family too
12Factor and Behaviour
- So you identify a child-specific factor. Does it 
 actually relate to behaviour?
- E.g., do a difference in parental treatment 
 really make a kid schizophrenic?
- Turkheimer  Waldron (2000) 
- Overall, specific non-shared environment factors 
 didnt account for a lot of the variability
13However
- Plomin, Ashbury  Dunn (2001) 
- Each factor doesnt, but add the specific factors 
 up and you start to get somewhere
Factor Variance accounted for 
in adjustment, personality, cognitive Birth 
order 0.01 Differential parental 
behaviour 0.02 Differential sib 
interactions 0.02 Differential peer or 
teacher interactions 0.05 Several other 
factors 0.03 Total 0.13 
 14Direction
- Remember correlation is not causation 
- Does parent treatment cause the behaviour, or 
 does the behaviour cause the parental treatment?
- Starting to look like the genetics of a child can 
 have a role on the behaviour of the parent
- Child appearance 
- Berkowitz  Frodi (1979) unrelated adults 
 punished unattractive children more than
 attractive children
- Allen et al. (1990) mothers less verbal and more 
 controlling of their children with congenital
 facial anomalies
15Other Issues
- Chance 
- Random events are another factor contributing to 
 nonshared environment
- Age differences 
- Specific factors in nonshared environment are 
 going to change markedly across development
16So
- Environmental influences do affect behaviour 
- More individual-by-individual than 
 family-by-family
- Family experiences are important, but these 
 environmental events will affect different
 individuals in different ways
17Genotype-Environment Correlation
- Genotype can influence environmental factors 
 effects
- Individuals have an active role in selecting, 
 modifying, and constructing their environment
- Extended phenotype 
- Niche construction
18Kendler  Baker (2007)
- 55 independent studies that estimated genetic 
 influences on an environmental variable
- Seven categories 
- General and specific stressful life events, 
 parenting as reported by child, parenting as
 reported by parent, family environment, social
 support, peer interactions, and marital quality
- 35 environmental measures from these categories
19Results
- Weighted heritability estimates from 7-39 for 
 individual environmental measures
- Most between 15-35 
- Weighted heritability for all environmental 
 measures was 27
- An individuals genetic influences on his/her 
 environment account for 25 of the variance in
 the nonshared environment component of behaviour
20Implications
- Strongly support the bi-directional model of 
 person environment inter-relationships
- Humans actively create important aspects of their 
 social environment and interpersonal
 relationships
- Molecular genetics advances promote 
 reductionistic models of inside the skin gene
 effects
- Cant give full picture of gene to behaviour 
 pathway
- Must consider the extended phenotype pathways 
- Standard heritability estimates cant distinguish 
 between inside and outside the skin pathways
- Needs to be addressed given non-trivial role of 
 genotype-environment correlation
21Three Types of Genotype-Environment Correlations
- Passive 
- Children passively inherit family environments 
 from their parents that are correlated with their
 genotype
- Interactions between genetically related 
 individuals
- Evocative (aka reactive) 
- Individuals, due to genotype, evoke reactions 
 from other people
- Between anyone who reacts to individuals due to 
 their genetic proclivities
- Active 
- When individuals select, modify, etc. experiences 
 that are correlated with their genetic
 propensities
- Between anyone or anything in the environment
22Method 1
- Only usable to detect passive 
- See if genetically influenced parental traits 
 correlate with both the environmental measure and
 the childrens trait
- Compare correlations in biological and adoptive 
 families
- Adoptive parents genetically different from 
 adopted children
- If correlation greater in biological family, 
 theres a passive genotype-environmental effect
23Method 2
- For evocative and active 
- Compare biological parents traits and adoptive 
 families environments
- Biological parents share genes with adopted away 
 children adoptive parents react to the adopted
 childrens genetic propensities (partially shared
 with the biological parents)
24Method 3
- Can be used on all three types 
- Multivariate genetic analysis of correlation 
 between an environmental measure and a trait
- Estimates degree to which genetic effects on one 
 environmental measure overlap with other genetic
 effects on a second measure
25In a Nutshell
- Passive seems most important in childhood 
- Evocative and, especially, active increase in 
 significance with development
- With age, individual does more to direct his or 
 her own environmental interactions, in part
 driven by own unique genotype
26Genotype-Environment Interaction
- Genotype-environment correlation role of 
 genetics in exposing an individual to
 environmental factors
- Genotype-environment interaction individuals 
 susceptibility to specific environments due to
 genotype
- Effect of environment on phenotype depends on 
 genotype, or
- Effect of genotype on phenotype depends on 
 environment
27Possibilities
- G has effect without effect of E 
- E has effect without G 
- Both G and E have an effect 
- Both G and E have an effect and interact with 
 each other
QT
QT
Low risk High risk G G
Low risk High risk G G
QT
QT
Low risk High risk G G
Low risk High risk G G
QT  phenotypic quantitative trait 
High risk E
G  genetic effects
E  environmental effects
Low risk E 
 28Study Designs for Testing G-E Interaction
- Non-human animal studies 
- Have the advantage of being able to manipulate 
 and control both genotype and environment
- Adoption studies 
- Cant manipulate environment experimentally, but 
 can take advantage of changed environment via
 adoption
- Twin studies 
- Can use one twins phenotype as index of 
 co-twins genetic risk for some trait
- Typically determining if heritability differs in 
 two environments
29General Findings
- Non-human animal models tend to show 
 interactions, but not consistent
- E.g., maze-bright maze-dull in enriched vs. 
 restricted environments
- Problem for animal models is that there is 
 limited opportunity for a rat in a cage to extend
 his phenotype
30- Some adoption studies support, but others fail to 
 find, genotype-environment interactions
- Twin studies generally find some effect 
- Not a lot of molecular genetic QTL work on this 
 yet, but what there is shows effects
- E.g., COMT allele and cannabis use study 
- Overall, support for modest genotype-environment 
 interaction
- A lot of variability in results depending on what 
 environmental measure is being used
- E.g., cognitive, psychopathology, attitude, 
 personality, etc.